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Newsgroups: comp.terminals,comp.protocols.misc
Subject: ANSI X3.64 sequences (was Re: VT100 scrolling region)
Summary: Escape code effects
Expires: Sun, 31 Jan 1993 22:23:24 GMT
References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Followup-To: comp.terminals
Distribution: world
Organization: University of Tennessee, Knoxville--Dept. of Computer Science
Keywords: VT100, scroll, control code, Escape, ANSI X3.64, terminal

In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (Peter D. Smith) writes:
> In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Frank I. Reiter)
> writes:
> > Part of an application I am working on includes a VT100 emulator.
> > 1) Does ESC [;22r mean "scroll lines 0 through 22" or does it mean "Set
> > the bottom scrolling line to 22, leave the top line as it is set already"?
>
> It should mean 'scroll lines 1 to 22'.

The control sequences recognized by the Digital Equipment Corporation
VT100, VT200, VT300, and VT400-family character-cell video terminals
are an extended variant of the control sequences specified by an ANSI
standard, ANSI X3.64.  (ISO DP6429 is the international version.)

The generic sequence introducer is a thing called CSI (Control
Sequence Introducer).  If you are using 8-bit communication, you
can use the hexadecimal value 9B to represent this (but be sure you
understand the side effects thereof).  Otherwise, use the 7-bit
equivalent: the Escape character (1Bh) followed by [  (the left
bracket character).

The canonical form of the given scroll-region command would be  

    CSI xx ; yy r

or in 7-bit style

    Esc [ xx ; yy r

(where xx and yy are decimal digits expressed in ASCII/IA5; you do not
actually use a space between sequence elements, this is for clarity.
Be careful with the notation here--sometimes a space character _is_
a sequence element, as in the SR Scroll Right editing function.)

In an X3.64 control sequence, the numeric arguments may default to an
arbitrary value specific to the device function being controlled.  Do
not assume that the default always will be 0 or 1. (Or there may be
no default allowed.)  For example, the numeric arguments in the GSM
(Graphic Size Modify) sequence have the default values 100, 100.

As a private extension to X3.64, DEC defines the DECSTBM (Set Top and
Bottom Margins) command as follows:

        CSI Pt ; Pb r

    Selects top and bottom margins defining the scrolling region.
    Pt is the line number of the first line in the scrolling region.
    Pb is the line number of the bottom line.
    If you do not select either Pt or Pb, they default to the top
    and bottom respectively.  Lines are counted from 1.

(See \VT220 Programmer Pocket Guide/, part EK-VT220-HR-002, page 37.)

> Remember that these sequences
> could be implemented in TTL without a microprocessor of any
> kind & therefore use the simplest possible implementation.  

Peter must be thinking of the much simpler DEC VT52 sequences.  As far
as I know, terminals implementing X3.64 have ALWAYS used a built-in
microprocessor.  The VT100 was built around an 8-bit-bus Intel 8085.

In fact, when the X3.64 document was published (circa 1978), some
vendors, insisting on using discrete logic designs, objected that the
standard was so complex it could not be implemented.  Most of these
vendors are now floating belly-up on the tide of technology.  Some
credit is due to The Heath Company for a pioneering microprocessor-
based video terminal that implemented many of the X3.64 functions.

> > 2) Should a clear screen code clear the scrolling region only, or the
> >    entire screen?  How about a clear to end of screen?
>
> I think this is the whole screen regardless of the scrolling region.
> Don't bet your company on it, though.

Screen clearing should not depend on scrolling.

Erasing parts of the display (EL and ED) in the VT100 is performed thus:

     Erase from cursor to end of line           Esc [ 0 K    or Esc [ K
     Erase from beginning of line to cursor     Esc [ 1 K
     Erase line containing cursor               Esc [ 2 K
     Erase from cursor to end of screen         Esc [ 0 J    or Esc [ J
     Erase from beginning of screen to cursor   Esc [ 1 J
     Erase entire screen                        Esc [ 2 J

Some brain-damaged terminal/emulators respond to Esc [ J as if it were
Esc [ 2 J (here the default is 0), and _some_ versions of Microsoft's
MS-DOS ANSI.SYS contain a bug requiring software to send Esc [ k
(instead of the uppercase).  Of course, you would never make this mistake.

The VT200 and later terminals have the ECH control sequence:

  Esc yy X

(where yy is a numeric parameter)

This erases the cursor position and the next (yy-1) positions, but this
is not part of the least common denominator VT100.

 - - - - - -

There is still various video-terminal information available for
anonymous FTP in "pub/shuford" from

    CS.UTK.EDU  [128.169.94.1]

 - - - - - -

VT, Flip Chip, DIBOL, and Rainbow are trademarks of Digital Equipment
Corporation.

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